Crawfordsville Daily Journal, Crawfordsville, Montgomery County, 22 September 1893 — Page 3

warn

Our "Ad."

In

This Space

Next Week

LeeS. Warner

The One-Price

CLOTHIER AND HATTER.

Successor to J. A. Joel.

FOR SALE BY-

ED. VANCAMP.

A.O. JENNISON,

ThtOld Reliable

PIONEER ABSTRACTER Loan, Real Estate And Insurance Agent.

Over 181 K. llaln St. Crawfordsvllle, Ind

B. F. WOODSON

-8ELLS-

Baggies Buckboards

Repairing Specialty.

3«5 North Washington St.

The Opium Habit Cured in All Its Forms.

I will treat patients on a guarantee—no oura, no pay.- Call and oonsoltme. Kid yourselves of tbls-dasterate habit. Treatment perfectly safe—oochlorlde at cold or Keeley Cure—any child aar take the medicine with safety. Same treatment*r!U alio cure the whisky or tobacco habit. Call on meat uiy office, 824 south WuhloikHi street, Orawford»»ille,-Ind.-

J. R. DUNCAN, M. D.

A. H. HERNLEY,

Special Collector.

mtoubU prompt^

Bcw emnnM «iu care p^^ny done. Of*

T. S. PAttoN,

FIRE INSURANCE.

Represents the' follbwltlg' Old Reliable Companies: Orient Insurance (Jo, of HartlMM9bit(^OleB*.JWIa'Insa*ana»

Co., of New York, Fireman's Fund Insurance Co., of California.

FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 22,1898

ItAfaLlNQ&jfat

Raft, Ueafetltul rainA Uiaa Hattie Naylor is clerking for Ike Larriok.

Jake Hose waa in town one evening thia w6et. Jim Howard and familj are viaitine Bro. John. '*1 V: pf

Cliarley-Xaaliner is here, woikihg at the ottpBriteccbuifaea« ,. i&l^lKkniSUM aqtt hfe.tthi ot i) scree to E. P. McOlaekey.

Mrs. Bradley has quit housekeeping and Uvea with her daughter. Dr. Owsley has oommenoed the erection of a fine dwelling on aoath Madison street.

The pay train waa in town a frw minutea yesterday, and made several of the txjys happy.

T. H. Mnpbtl it #itH his-ehtoUtai' at the State Fair, and is about the only one there from here.

SeVen -weddings in and aroufad town last week, and as many more now fixing. Look out next week. 0. O. Trihbitt is kept busy crying public salsa. Faamere aeem to be determined to aell off their surplus etook.

Abe Simmons and mother have come back-from. Linden. Abe will bake bread for as Darlingtonites as I linden is too •low to hold him.

Dariingtoin Lodge,- No, 168, FiA A.1E, ha# 'invitdtl'tb assist in layitfg tbe oorner atone of a new publio school building on the 27th.

Bill Moor« moves to the Bradley house, George Henderson to the house vaoatea by Moore, and J. M. Delaney to the Henderson house.

Eugene Owaley wears the red ribbon aa the greatest fishertawn along the oreek, bavinglsBded a'oarp that weighed a little over fifteen pounds.

Sohool started off last Monday at a lively1'gait irith Frank Smith in the lead, Ina Oarns, No 3 Neil Cunningham, No. 2, and Jennie Kersey, No. 1.

Perry MoNauinea sells forty acres in Sugar Oreek township to It. O. Harper, aqd buys fifty-aeven acres of W. 0. Kimler in Franklin township.

Supt. MoAlevy did one of the beet acts of hia life in removing the man he had here1 in charge of the gas' works and giving us quite a sober, good looking young man

Had the farmers known on the first of June what they do now, that we would have no rain until the first of Ootober, many of them would have 'thrown up the sponge and gone Democratic.

L. O. Thompson, Aniel Booher, John Peterson and wife, A. K. Peterson and wife, L. W. Peterson and wife and A. Peterson, wife and baby, Win. Shoes maker andrO. Earl Martin are at the World's Fair this week.

The oorn crop in Franklin township this year will be a short half orop. We haveeoueoew-fieeh 4aod well uoderdtabed th&tr will lAake stxty bushels" to the. acre demonstrating, the fact that oorn on certain soils can be raised without any rain.

Mtic

kiciimomf

Jssf KtacaidHfr., is very/ sick withrheumatism. Qeo. F. Long and wife have returned from Indianapolis.

G. W. Washburn' is visiting his daughter at Anderaon. Mrs. Lina Mitchell, of Nora Springs, Iowaf is vising her' parents.

Ed Wilson haa been .spending his vacation with friends at Brown's Valley, The deputy sheriff was her* Saturday calling upon those-who were-at the Lyon's dan Mr

W, W. WaShtrarn and wife and- Dora Ammerman'and wife are home from the WorWe-Fair.- & ,W. A. MoBethand 8. S. Phillips left Monday for Te'rre Haute where they will jNiter Normal school.

Geo. Wsshburn is ereoting a new welling. The assistant postmaster will py it rumor says

Joseph Snyder and family will move to California soon where Mr. S. will have oiarge of a bee ranch.

School oommenoed here Monday with Mr. Kelley principal and Miss Annie Dewey in primary room. Both rooms an full.

The aohool teachers from thia place have all been assigned places as follows: Eya MoGallum, Linden Lizzie Vaughn) Wingate Ella Davissoot in Tippecanoe county Walter -Vaughn* Bound Hill.

GBAtr£l.Lll BVS.

Omer Butler ia suffering with asthma iuid hay-fever. Sohool oommenoed Monday with ten scholars in attendance.

Mr» Hannah- Wterd haa returned from a pleasant'visit with her ohildren at Amo.

MissBlanche Hamilton, of Darlington visited Misa Mabel Peebles part of last week.

Miss Maflde Johnson attended the Bintord-Gox nuptials at GarfieldWednesday evening.

Elwood, Thomas, Mary, Mina and Ratie Rich, of Sugar Plain, attended bhutch here last Sunday.

Although we have no store nor have our mail delivered, we do have a meat wsgonowned by J. A. Thorp, on Tuesday) and Friday, Wednesday Mr. Davis, of OrawfoidsvUle, deals out gasoline and ooal oil Thursday and Saturday two huckster wagons-pass through, and Friday Mr. Armstrong passes^ with general merchandise So with all this noiss and oommotion we manage to live and keep up appearaBoes.-

Used iii

fBOM H£H£AID THEME.

—Mra. A. D. Thomas is In Indianapolis. —M. J. Ctfroll wsqfr to Lafayeturtiidayl —ThS"Sig*Four pay car went throtigfa to-day. —Dr. Gonealea haa returned from Ghioago. —Shillings Minstrels appear at Mtfilc Hall to-night. —Miss-Anna Halpin left to day—for GhtmpSIgn, HI. —LuJky Baldwin is in the city visiting Jack Baldwin. —J. W. Cumberland has returned from Indianapolis. —A. O. JenniBon has returned fftMn the Mineral Springs. —Mra. M. D. White has' returned from a visit in Ghioago. —Mrs. Charles Webster haa returned tb hefr"°tttne*in Marion. —Eat Damas Gilbert's bread M»0 cakesl Thfey are the beet. 9-1-W-—Joe Symmea and family, of Roodhouse, Els., are visiting in the city. —C. W. Jones and wife, of Ft. Scott, Kansas, are guests of J. R. Howard. —D. O. Reynolds is in Boone county looking after a gravel road contracts" —Mrs.' Lyde Ramsey and Mrs. Josle Newton went to Indianapolis this morning. —Mrrf. Ab^ Kempfltet, nee Fannie Joel, is down from South Bend on*a visit. —Miss Florence Whitesell, of Knightfe* town, Ind., is the guest of Miss Florence Bennett. —J. R. Breaks and wife leave next week for Ashville, N. O., where they will spend the winter. —The social at the Methodist churett last evening was well attended and proved quite a success. —Mrs. 1. C. Elston and Miss Nancy are home from Harbor Point, Mioh, where they spent the eummer. —Crane & Anderson have been appointed to defend Coppeck, the alleged sewing machine embezzler, of Ladoga —Mrs. Frank McOalip and Misa Lydia Dillman were called to Colntnbuti to day by the death of their cousin Miss-Minnie Dillman. —Oapt. J. B. Pence and wife returned from Harbor Point, Mioh,, to day. They will remain indefinitely, Oapt. Penoe'a health being much improved. —The Oity Laundry is now ready to receive customers in its handsome new room in the Crawford block, two doors sbnth of Thb Journal building. tf —Apron eooial by Christian ohuroh O. E. at 710 south Washington street Friday, Sept. 22. Gentleman 10 oentsf lacHes^S oentor Refreshments, iee' oreaitr and oake., —At the Methodist church Sunday the morning subject will be "The Congress of Religions or Christianity Tri"hmphant,"' and the evetoing, •The Religion of N6gsl1on or Ingersollism." —Frank Bishop, one of the men arrested on oirens day for robbing Mrs. Harvey Thompson has been unable- to give bond. He is at present"' debating' aa to what eoaraerh&shaald^pUNne. —MiBs'JeairNel&sKr has gttne'to New York'fritytd stwdymuaSeiir the^Nation^ el Conservatory of Musie, and will take a special course ift^l&gHSh-ih'OoftithblK' oollege.-

Oreencastle'Bannerxmd Timet.

—On Wefhrasdflfy,' WhUe** 4 B^evca obtained divoreecfof1Frank «8fe»nt, the brother of the? lamented Buok Stout, who w«sih«lged'lie*«rtfl'yearri *gafor a murder at Darlington.-. The- same firm previously obtained a divorce tor one of Buok's sisters,-"and also ottevfor^tbe-'sis-' ter of Johb Ooff^efWhl^'walH 'hanged 'for the murder of the McMtilt^tas.'

Mir

BOSS.

A. W. Johnson is teaching at Mace. W. H. Qott was at Roachdala onTueada.v. John Brush sient Wednesday at Indianapolis.

Mrs. J. T, Brouaugh visited at Lizton last week. Fred Gott will enUsr school at Ladoga next Monday.

The street-' commissioner is spreading on the -streets. Mrs. Wilson Tiptoe thinks of going to California 4or hor health."

Aubrey Bowers* left last Sunday fcirliap-' land where he will teach. Harris & Coddihfton are building a residence tor R, G. Harris.

Miss Eva Imel will spend the Fall at Kankakee and Danville ills. Walnut townshio institute will ba held at Mace on Saturday Oct. 81.

The followinfr'-pertong' were at the Worlds Fair last week: Geo. Powell -and wife, IsaacGoUiday,and wife,. W: S. McIntire, Mrs. W. H. Gott, Marion Stoner and Misses Anna Miller £hnice Powell, and Mattie Johnson,' attd Frtd'Oett*, James' Bowman, A. W. and C.'K.' ohiisonJ

The Women's Christian Temperance Union and the Loyal Temperance Legion organised here in June are doing some effloent work in popularizing the cause of temperance and In dolng battle against the saloon. On September .0 the society electee the following officers President, Mre. E. C. Bowersj' VicePros.. .Mrs. So-

ture, Mrs. Mollie McVey Vice-Prebidepts JSx-Offlcio, Mra. AUoe Shepherd, M. E. church Mrs. Mattie Thompson, Christian church. On last. Sunday evening a public meeting was held at the Christian church, where Bible readings and choice selections were given. The service was Interspersed with temperance songs and recitations, rendered in a pleasing manner.

owder

Ths-only Pure Cream of-Tartar Powder.—No Ammonia No Alumi

Millions of Homes—40 Years the

rjmSim

8EAH0EB.

V.Q.Irwin in the-Bole ot a Spiritualistic Missionary. Peru Republican: James M. Allison, a spiritualistic medinln'of Indianapolis," has given'SMrtunWi^'of sesneei in this olty rscsntly, ancJ' tdmi«'eonvert«.

He

was induced to oome here by V. Q. Irwin, of the elStitrio light plant, who is strong in the faith, to institute a oircle, ahd will"1 probfebly^ Succeed: Among those on whom he hM'made an impression are I. B. Myers, Ed Gray, Mose Rosenthal, Dr. Hathaway and George Leas."' On Just as many more he has failed. Some of these admit, hbwever, that his feats appear as being performed by something more than htaman agency. The operatibna of the medium are by slate writing and some ot the communications from the spirit world are quite intelligent and aocarate.

The Financial Beport.

The Finanoe Oommittee has made the following report to the Mayor and oounoil: TO thu Honorable Mayor and Common Council:

The Finanoe Committee beg leave to submit the following report and recommbnpstions,'vizi That in making an estimate of expenditures for the year ld94 we find our expenditures will not reiach thirty' thbtttarfd dollars. Our v4ltt*tibh as made by theJ Board of Re vifew giv^esns oyet1 fbnr miilibns' of taxable property, and we recommend that tax levy be the same as last year, 90 oents. This will raise sufficient revenue to meet the current expenses and pky 15,000 on the' electric light bonds. We would also recommend' that an amount be set aside' as a sinking fund sufficient to raise the above amount.

Respectfully, R. C. Smith, HEKBT

Wm. Vanabsdali.

At Musio Hall To-Night.

Charles E. Schilling, of musioal fame, hsla something new to spring on the publio every year. This season he beliefveb he has eolijised hie own reoord and lias gathered together the beet show be has 6Ver owned. Among the surprises this season the "King Solomon's Court" firht part takes first place. The sittings ant] decorations are the moet elaborate ever used by any minstrel organization, and the coetunfies have never been surpassed by any oomio opera or spectacular production, most ot them having beta Imported And- will bear closest inspection. Particular attentibn' has been devoted to the vooal and instrumental portion of the entertainment and no expense has been spared to make it all that oonld be deeiredi

The MononVATinu&l Statement. The annual meeting ot the stockholders of the L., N. A. fc O. railroad was held yesterday afternoon. The old directors were re-elected with the exception of E. D. Hawkins and M. W. Bumstead, who are replaced by J. H. Bond and Washington Connor. The annual report shows that'the gross earnings tor the year have beeta 99,490,888.33 opering expenses and taxes $2,865,805.43 net earnings, $1,185,022'9®. The'pay-' mentb from net-earnings were: Interest and rentals, g954 840 55 surplus,S180,18i.8S. The Increase ot gross earnings ov«ir the preoedingyear'waB $349 380.61, And over the year ending June 30,1891, •606,170.16.

Venus IsSBidHame.

Lloyd Hammond failed to recover his find bioyole yesterday when he went with officer Gill to Black Crefek in search b't it. He liearned the name of the thief however. The wheel

was

stolen by

Veaus Mapee, a mah who is wanted in Illihois for forgery. He landed in Chtwfordsville on Tuesday, went to the to the college,' stole the wheel, went out to see-hie brother who works tor Jacob Swink on Black Oreek and left that night for Chicago on the wheel. The police hope to overhaul him yet.

MoAlevy-Palmer,

The marriage has been announced of John MoAlevy, superintendent of the Natural Gas Company, to Mrs. Allie Palmer, the daughter ot W. D. Jones, of tbe'Robbins House. The marriage ootsttred early in the summer at Warsaw when Mre. Palmer was staying with her father. The wedding waa not made pdblio, however, until yesterday. The friehda ot Mr. and Mre. MoAlevy unite in extending congratulations.

BBOWK'S VALC^T.

IF. H. Boylsnd, ot Anderson, visited home folks Sunday. Miss Lila Gott is attending high sohool at Orawfordsville. 3. A. Gott, ot Lebanon, was the guest of' Henry Williams this week.

Charley MoCullongh and wife have returned from the World's Fair. Mr. and Mrs.'J. V. Todd, of Partridge, Kan., are visiting relatives here.

Mias"Lora Patton hae gone to Dana wbeto she will trim again this winter. School opened Monday with Misses Minnie Simms and Dora Lydiek as teaohers.

Miss Jessie Boyland has returned from Orawfordsville after a week's visit with Miss Lula Cruce.

Mrs. Carrie Olinger and daughters have moved toCrawfordsville where they wilt make their future home.

Miss Mahy E. Wilbite -will organize classes in physical culture, including the Delsarte system, Swedish gymnastics, and the use of wands, dumb-bells, etc. Classes will also be formed for pupils wishiriR to study oratory. 302 Wabash avenue for particulars. tf

I think Ely's Cream Balm is the best remedy for catarrh 1 ever saw. I never took anything that relieved me so quickly, and 1 have not felt so well for along time. I used to be troubled with severe head* aches two or three times a week.—J. A. Alcorn, Ag't U. P. R. R. Co., Eaton, Colo.

BABY AND HIS CAT.

riw Unwanted night Which Attracted All Eyea da a Crowded Street. The sidewalk was filled with hurrying people, says the New York Times. Three peddlers stood on the curb, one Witt

shoe lacW, another with candy, aitbtliet- with gold paint.- Neither looked-sis If he e&pected-to sell'any* tlila^.. Nobody paid the slightest at'"ntlon to them. A man without legs tee stuniJSinjj over the sidewalk. People1ine¥ey htarrted out of' hid A man passed, dressed in outlandish' garments, advertising a patent medicine. Nobody looked twice at him. Ate

old woman whose tangled' gray hatrs -were blown in the Wind shuffled' feebly along and nobody saw her. A pair ot

Chinese," an Italian woman

otessiSd as for a fete, a negro nearly seveta feet in height, a Turk s'wsMdlfed In turban and baggy trousers, a drunken woman, a, man with locomotor ataxia —all passed within a' few minutes'and hotiody stttjMfWl

moment to

OlMPBtOAi,

even

for a

look at an^Jody else,

except

the beggars, and they were utterly disregarded. Then appeared from somewhere, as If out of* a hole In' the grotmd a'child about two yeans old, ragged and smeared as to its hands with mud and as to its face with traces of bread and molaSsetr beBld^tf plath dirt. Its halir was tousled and Its large* blue eyetf1 Were fixed straight ahead with all that sweet unconsciousness of childhood written of by poets. In iter hands it carried a' gray cat. One little' flst grabbed the loose skin at the nape, the other grasped it firmly over the hind quarters. Each particular leg of the eat struck out straight and rigid 'eich' claw showed its shining curve. The cat did not appear to be uncomfortable, and the child was gloriously uhoonscibus of everything but its own baby thoughts'. The child was so young -that it went unsteadily, tottering down the middle of the sidewalk, with the cat held up in front of It like a drummajor's staff.1 There was not one hurrying Wayfarer—man or woman—who did not pause and laugh. A number

Btbpped short and followed the child ad it staggered alone. By the time the baby had traveled half a block lt had an escort of twenty grown persons besides the swarm of boys. The baby tottered along, its magnificent gravity undisturbed, and when a breathless, bareheaded woman came running and snatched up the young explorer (still holding on bravely to the cat) each person in the crowd looked sheepish and hurried away.

TWO SUPERSTITIONS.

Friday and Thirteen Havt a Reniatalfl«° Hold on Several Natloiialltle.: Neither the Friday nor the thirteen' superstition is traceable to any:satisfafctory source, says the Philadelphia: Bulletin. In the case of the first we find the superstition obtaining alike with the English, the Swedish and the Indian' races,'a'nd'wlth each going back to some belief concerning a worshiped being or a religious rite. But there the whole matter ends. In the case of the' English speaking Christian, the fact that Friday the cruclflxibn took place is assigned as the reason for selecting that day from the other six daj'6 asbf especial significance. Butaccording to this very argument that day should be one of good omen rather than' one of ill/since the* event witli whioh the day is connected augured thi salvation, not the condemnation, of the disciples of Christianity. Friday In n6 way cas be explained as a day"for' fear, though it rnfcy be as one of great sorrow and thankfulness.

Neither does the mythological explanation of Friday's slgniflcanoy offered in the case of the eastern and Scandinavian people account any more satisfactorily for the superstition, and with the number thirteen the results of1investigation are the same. The plain fact is that Friday and thirteen are indelibly marked by superstition, have been so marked as far back as history relates, and probably always will be so marked. The present aversioh to the day and the number is not deductive but instinctive—blindly, but none the less positively, instinctive— and, in a large measure, irradiclible, despite education and religious teaching.

There have

been

many blows admin­

istered to the superstitions, particularly bf recent years. New York-" is the birthplace of a thirteen club, which haS thirteen members, meets alwaj-s the thirteeHtW of the month1, and in a house numbered- thirteen. But the negative influence which this organization has exerted so far is not perceptible Neither is the campaign oondudted by ministers, scholars and teachers any more effective. All that these attacks have accomplished has noti been sufficient to be felt. Superstition is as illogical as it is tenacious, and human endeavor to break it down is not likely to succeed.

fine t'hvtngrapha.

If yon want nn artistic photo go to the Cincinnati artist at Lawson's gallery. We print sale bills on sl.ort notice.

Tiir Jovrnatj Co Printers.

Woman's Mistake, She tries to do too much. This applies to all women. The ambitious girl striving for school honors. The busy house wife, the shop girl, the society woman.

What follows? Nervous prostration, excitability, fainting spells, dizziness, sleeplessness, backache, and most

likely organic diseases of the

uterus or womb, causing bearing-down pains and irregularity.

Oh! women, if you must bring upon yourself these troubles, remember that Lydia E. Pinkhanis Vegetable Compound has done more to relieve such suffering than anyotherremedy. "It

cured me,

and will you." Mrt. Jennit Z. Kears, iiSS Market Street

Harriiburgt Pa.

All druggists .Mil It.

Co., Lnn^Mr,

'LlnrPills,

B6 cud. J*'

EVERYTHING NEW

Bedroom Suits

:'\S

In Millinery

Now Open for Inspection.

C«r. Miehifan Aii iMKmiII ttmiCAM.

NOMI[Oi) fNITMIpTWN.

All the Latest Ideas in Cloaks

Just reeeived.

New Dress Qmds

In Novelties and Staples.

Look out for the annoilhcement of our Grand Milliner}* and'Clohk Opening,

ABE LEV1NSON.

These goods you need. Come in and sec them.

$15.0:0

Zack Mahorney& Sons.

THE

honey's Leland Has No Equal in'Taste" Or Aromas Try It and** Be Coniforttfti

"HE THAT WORKS' EASILY, WORKS SUCCESSFULLY." CLEAN HOUSE WITH

SAPOLIO

CHtAP

Mm\wp

MAROIMi

PersonV fd^ijphbm We

PEUMBlNfr-

They will convince you that-our work is reliable.'

WILLIAMS1 BROS"

112 SOUTH GREEN STREET.

Boards

THIS WEEK.

Solid Oak

One like cut for—

H5.00

Will continue the snle on Rockers one more week.

$1.75, $2.90, $3.45, $4.65

And Upwards.

W

PHENVO-CAFFEIN!

If you ever have Headache or Neuralgia, take Pheiiyo-Cafl'oin Pills.

They are effectual In relieving Tain, and !n curing Headache or Neuralgia. Tboy are not a eatnarttc, and' contain nothing that stuuines. ey tone up the nerves, and tend to prevent ru—9 ol Headache and Neuralgia. They are teed to do all that is clalmod for them.

TESTIMONIALS.

have never seen anything act so promptly as lenjro-CaOeln In sick and nervous Heailacbe. tfanv cases have been cored, and not any fullijei reported. H. L. Karrer, Belle Voir, N. O. rears I have been a terrible sufferer from he: some sli months ago, my physician bed Phenyo-Caffeln, ana since then, by e, I have not liad a severe headache, being asle to stop them completely In their luclplencyv J. H. Btannard, Concord, N. II.

Yodthlt the nail on (he head when you put They are tlie

Callelu on the market Ding out for headache. .. P. Jones,M. 1}., Orleans, Mass. itjrear ago I was one of the greatest sufferrom sick and nervous headache that 1 ever

I no more have trouble with sick headUknd seldom have even a slight headache. I tribute the great change

mi

a

Jto your fhenyo-Cal-

remedy I could not po without It It cost I have tried a dozen ot more medl.warranted to ture], without their even helping ma. I can not praise your valuable pre--pamnn enough. Frank S. Schmitt,Seymour,Ind

For sale by your druggist.

AH rOR

Fred Boudinard's Bread.

And yeu will get the Best.

Rye Bread a Specialty.

Bakery, Corner of Main and

Walnut Sts.

VANDALIA LINE

11 TZKB TABU I NOHTHHODND. «t. Joe Mall South Uend Express. St. Joe Special IxicalTrelght..........

SoutI

N:1011. in.

...,(1:1U p. 111. 2 111. 2:33 p. 111.

BODTHBOUND.

Tfcrre Bautc Express.. te Mall Express lyocul'f relglit

0:44 a. 111. fi:20 p. in.

8:10 j). 111.

2 1 1 1

For complete time card, giving all trains and StStlOtSj ind for full Information as for rates, through cars. eto„ address